Theosophical
Society President
The Writings of C Jinarajadasa
The Vision
of the Spirit
First Published 1915
The history of humanity is the history of ideas, and the stages through which
men have risen from savage to civilized are distinguishable one from the other
by the influence of certain great doctrines. Among these teachings which have
moulded civilizations, the idea of Evolution stands out as heralding a new era
in the world of thought. Considered at first as of mere academic interest, soon
it was recognized as of practical value, today it is known as necessary in the
understanding of every problem in every department of being.
Nevertheless it is a fact that the doctrine of evolution is a theory after all.
No one has lived long enough to see sufficient links in the evolutionary chain
to attest that the charges postulated as having taken place did so actually
occur, and that the chain is not a fancy but a fact. Yet evolution is accepted
by all as a dynamic idea, for like a magic wand it performs wonders in the world
of thought. It marshals the heterogeneous organisms of nature into orderly
groups, and from inanimate atom to protoplasm, from unicellular organism to
multi-cellular, from invertebrate to vertebrate, from ape to man, one ascending
scale of life is seen; –
And
striving to be man, the worm
Mounts through all the spires of form
Yet none can say that evolution is an agreeable fact to contemplate, for there
is a ruthlessness in Nature’s methods which is appalling. Utterly cruel and
wasteful she seems, creating and perfecting her creatures only to prey on each
other, generating more than can live in the fierce struggle for existence. “Red
in tooth and claw with ravin”, she builds and un-builds and builds again,
one-pointed only in this, that a type shall survive, reckless of the pleasure
or pain to a single life. Men themselves, proud though they be in a fancied
freedom of thought and action, are nothing but pawns in a game she plays. The
more fully evolution is understood from such facts as scientists have so far
gathered, the more justifiably can men say, with Omar, of their birth, life and
death:
Into
this Universe, and Why not knowing,
Nor Whence, like Water - willy-nilly flowing,
And out of it, like Wind along the Waste
I know not Whither, willy-nilly blowing.
Of course this attitude does not represent
that of the majority of men. Millions of men believe in a Creator, and that
“God’s in his heaven, All’s right with the world!” But it is no exaggeration to
say that their optimism continually receives rude shocks. No man or woman of
sensibility can look about him and not agree with Tennyson's comparison of life
to a play :–
Act
first, this Earth, a stage to gloom’d with woe
You all but sicken at the shifting scenes
And yet be patient. Our Playwright may show
In some fifth Act what this wild drama means.
Both the idea of Evolution and the idea of Divine Guidance, as each is at
present conceived, fail to satisfy fully the needs of men for an inspiring view
of life. The former indeed shows a splendid pageant of Nature, but it has no
message to individual man, except to make the most of his brief day of life,
and stoically resign himself to extinction when Nature shall have no further
use for him. The latter speaks to men's hearts in alluring accents of a power that
maketh for righteousness, but it sees God as existing only in the gaps of that
pitiless cosmic order which science reveals. It is obvious, therefore, that any
philosophy which postulates an inseparable relation, between God and evolution,
between Nature and man, is worthy of examination, and this is the view of life
which Theosophy propounds, in the light of one great idea.
This idea is that of the Evolution of Life.
Just as modern science tells us of a ceaseless change of forms from protoplasm
to man, so Theosophy asserts that there is, pari passu, a changing,
growing life. This life does not originate in the forms, though we see it
associated with them; and of it Theosophy says that first, it is
indestructible, and second, that it evolves.
It is indestructible, in the sense that when an organism is destroyed,
nevertheless all is not destroyed, for there remains a life which is still
conscious. If a rose fades and its petals crumble and fall to dust, the life
of that rose has not therefore ceased to be; that life persists in Nature,
retaining in itself all the memories of all the experiences which it gained
garbed as a rose. Then in due course of events, following laws which are
comprehensible, that life animates another rose of another spring, bringing to
its second embodiment the memories of its first. Whenever, therefore, there
seems the death of a living thing, crystal or plant, animal or man, there
always persists an indestructible life and consciousness, even though to all
appearance the object is lifeless, and processes of decay have begun.
Further, this life is evolving, in exactly the same way that the scientist says
that an organism evolves. The life is at first amorphous, and responds but
little to the stimuli from without; it retains only feeble memories of its
experiences which it gains through its successive embodiments. But it passes
from stage to stage, through more and more complex organisms, till slowly it
becomes more definite, more diverse in its functions. As the outer form evolves
from protoplasm to man, so evolves too the life ensouling it. All Nature,
visible and invisible, is the field of an evolution of life through successive
series of evolving forms. The broad stages of this evolving life are from
mineral to vegetable, from vegetable to animal, and from animal to man.
The doctrine of a life that evolves through evolving forms answers some of
those questions which puzzle the biologist today. Many a fact hitherto
considered outside the domain of science is seen as illustrative of new laws,
and existing gaps are bridged over to make the doctrine of evolution more
logical than ever. It further shows Nature as not wasteful, and only seemingly
cruel, for nothing is lost, since every experience in every form which was
destroyed, in the process of natural selection, is treasured by the life today.
The past lives in the present, to attest that Nature’s purpose is not death
crushing life, but life ever triumphant over death to make out of stocks and
stones immortal men.
In each human being is seen this same principle of an imperishable evolving
life. For man is an individual life and consciousness, an immortal soul capable
of living apart from the body which we usually call “the man.” In each soul,
the process of evolution is at work. At his entrance on existence as a soul, he
is feeble and chaotic in his consciousness, vague and indefinite in his
understanding of the meaning of life, and capable only of a narrow range of
thought and feeling. But he too evolves, from indefinite to definite, from
simple to complex, from chaos to order.
Man’s evolution is by successive manifestations in bodies of flesh, passing at
the death of one body to begin life once more in another new one. In this
passage, he carries with him the memory of all experiences which he has gained
in the past behind him. This aspect of the evolution of life as it affects men
is called Reincarnation.
As all processes of Nature are intelligible on the hypothesis of an evolution
of organisms, so all that happens to men becomes comprehensible in the light of
reincarnation. As evolution links all forms by species and genus, family and
order, class and group, sub-kingdom and kingdom, into one unbreakable chain, so
reincarnation binds all human experiences into one consistent philosophy of
life. How reincarnation explains the mysteries around us and inspires us, we
shall now see.
Imagine with me that existence is symbolized by a mountain, and that millions
are climbing to its summit. Let many days be needed before a traveler comes to
his goal. Then, as he climbs day after day, the perspective of things below him
and above him will change; new sights will greet his eyes, new airs will
breathe around him; his eyes will adjust themselves to new horizons, and step
by step objects will change shape and proportion. At last, on reaching the
summit, a vast panorama will extend before him, and he will see clearly every
part of the road which he climbed, and why it dipped into this valley and
circled that crag. Let this mountain typify existence, and let the climbers up
its sides be men and women who are immortal souls.
Let us now think for a moment of travelers at the mountain’s base, who are to
climb to its summit. We know how limited must be their horizon, and how little
they can see of the long path before them. Let such travelers typify the most
backward of our humanity, the most savage and least intelligent men and women
we can find today. According to reincarnation, these are child-souls, just
entering into existence, in order to undergo evolution and to be made into
perfect souls. To understand the process of evolution let us watch one of them
stage by stage as he climbs the mountain.
The first thing which we shall note is that this child-soul manifests a
duality. For he is soul and body; as a soul he is from God, but as a body he is
from the brute.
The
Lord let the house of a brute to the soul of man
And man said, “Am I your debtor?”
And the Lord – “Not yet: but make it as clean as you can,
And then I will let you a better.”
The body which he occupies has ingrained in it a strong instinct of
self-preservation stamped upon it by the fierce struggle for existence of its
animal progenitors; he himself, as a soul coming from God, has intuitions as to
right and wrong, but as yet hardly any will. The body demands for its
preservation that he be self-assertive and selfish; lacking the will to direct
his evolution, he acts as the body impels.
THE VISION OF THE SEPARATED
SELF
Hence at this earliest stage of the soul,
his vision of life as he climbs is that of the separated self. “Mine, not
yours” is his principle of action; greed rules him, and a thirst for sensation
drives him on, and he little heeds that he is unjust and cruel to others as he
lives through his nights and days of selfishness and self- assertion. He seems
strong-willed, for he is able to crush the weaker before him. But in reality he
has no will at all, for he is but the plaything of an animal heredity which he
cannot control. He has no more freedom of will than the water-wheel which turns
at the bidding of the descending stream. He is but the tool of a “will to live”
which accomplishes a purpose not his own.
Millions of men and women around us are at this first stage. Their craftiness,
hardly deserving the name of intellect, is that of Falstaff for whom “the world
is mine oyster which I with sword will open.” In their least animal phases,
comfort is their aim in life: “They dressed, digested, talked, articulated
words; other vitality showed they almost none.” The universe around them is
meaningless, and they are scarce capable of wonder: “Let but a Rising of the
Sun, let but a creation of the world happen twice , and it ceases to be
marvellous, to be noteworthy or noticeable”. The centre of the circle of the
cosmos is in themselves, and they neither know nor care if another truer centre
is possible.
Yet when we recognize that each of these souls is immortal, and that his future
is “the future of a thing whose growth and splendour have no limit,” we begin
to understand why, at this early stage, selfishness plays such a prominent part
in his life. For in stages to come, he must be capable of standing alone firm
on the basis of a coherent individuality; now is the time for him to develop
initiative and strength. He is quick to retaliate, but the germs of swift
decision are grown thereby; he is domineering and cruel, but the seeds of
intelligent enterprise result from the animal cunning which he displays. Every
evil which he does must some time be paid back in laborious service to his
victims; yet on the whole the evil which he does at this stage is less in
quantity and in force, for all its seeming, than that done in later stages,
where intelligence is keener and emotion more powerful. At a certain period in
human evolution, selfishness has its place in the economy of things, for
selfishness too is a force used to build the battlements of heaven.
These souls, whose youth alone is the cause of their selfishness, are in their
essence divine. There is in them no evil of a positive kind ; their vices are
but the result of the absence of virtues, ad their evil “is null, is naught, is
silence implying sound”. Each is a “good man” who, deep down within him, has a
knowledge of “the one true way” though in his attempts to tread it he seems to
retrograde rather than to evolve. Like plants in a garden, they are all tended
by Him from whom they come; He knows the perfect souls that He will make out of
them by change and growth as the ages pass by.
Though
still confused his service is unto Me,
I soon shall lead him to a clearer morning.
Sees not the gardener, even while he buds his tree,
Both flower and fruit the future years adorning?
Life after life, these souls come to birth, now as men and now as women; they
live a life of selfishness, and they die, and hardly any change will be
noticeable in the character ; but slowly there steals into their lives a
dissatisfaction. The mind is too dull to grasp the relation of the individual
to the whole, and the imagination is too feeble to realize that “man doth not
live by bread alone”. Hence it is that “the thousand natural shocks that flesh
is heir to” are duly marshaled and employed to ruffle their self-centered
contentment. Old age and death cast over them shadows which have no power to
sadden a philosophic mind; disease and accident lie in wait for them to weight
down their spirits and make them rebel against a fate they do not understand.
Till their hearts shall enshrine a divine purpose, a Hound of Heaven pursues
them, and “naught shelters thee, who wilt not shelter Me.”
Thus are they made ready to pass on to the next stage; the foundations of
abilities have been laid, and the individual is firm on a basis built through
selfishness. Now has come the time to begin the laborious work of “casting out
of the self” and so there opens before the soul’s gaze the vision of the next
stage. According to the type of soul, this vision is either the Vision of the
Mind or the Vision of the Emotions.
There are in life two main types of souls, the one in whom intelligence
controls emotion, and the other in whom emotion sways the mind. One type is not
more evolved than the other ; they are both stages to pass through in order to
grow a higher faculty, that of Intuition. The vision of the third stage is the
Vision of the Intuition, but to it souls come from the first stage either
through intellect or through emotion. Let us first consider those souls whose
evolution is by way of intellect.
THE VISION OF THE MIND
We shall see in the past of these souls that much intelligence has been
developed in the first stage ; their selfishness has made them quick and
cunning to adapt opportunities to minister to their comfort. This intelligence
is now taken up by the unseen Guides of evolution, and the soul is placed in
environments that will change mere animal cunning into true intellect. The past
good and evil sown by him will be adjusted in its reaping, so as to give him
occupations and interests that will force him to think of men and things around
him apart from their relation to himself. Instead of weighing experiences in
terms of personal comfort, he begins to group them in types and categories ;
little by little he begins to see a material and moral order in the cosmos
which is more powerful than his will. Each law of Nature, when first seen, is
feared by him, for it seems to exist only to thwart him. But later, with more
experience of their working, he begins to trust laws and to depend upon them to
achieve his aim. A love of learning appears in him, and Nature is no longer a
blank page ; he has ceased to be “a pair of spectacles behind which there is no
eye”.
At this stage, we shall see that the selfishness still in him will warp the
judgments of his mind. He will be a doctrinaire, a pedant, combative and full
of prejudice ; for all his intellect, his character will show marked
weaknesses, and he will often see and propound principles of conduct which he
will not be able to apply to himself. Again and again he will fail to see how
little he understands the world, since the world is the embodiment of a life
which is more than mind, and whoso understands it with mind alone will always
misunderstand. Excess of intellect will become in him defect of intelligence,
and he will see all things as through a glass darkly.
Many a life will pass while he slowly gains experiences through the mind, and
assimilates them into a truer conception of life. By now he will have begun to
take part of the intellectual life of the world and when he is on the threshold
of the next stage, we shall find him as a worker of science, philosophy or
literature. But his intellect has too great a personal bias still, and it must
be made impersonal and pure before the next vision, that of the intuition, can
be his. Once again, we shall see that there enters into his life a
dissatisfaction. The structure which he builds so laboriously, as the results
of years of work, will crumble one by one, because Nature reveals new facts to
show the world that his generalizations were only partly true. The world for which
he toiled will forget him, and younger workers will receive the honors which
are his due. He will be misunderstood by his dearest friends, and “he is now ,
if not ceasing, yet intermitting to eat his own heart, and clutches round him
outwardly on the Not-me for wholesomer food”.
But this suffering, though the reaping of sad sowings of injustice to others
through prejudice, brings in its train a high purification sooner or later. At
last the soul learns the great lesson of working for work’s sake and not for
the fruit of action. Now he knows the joy of altruistic dedication of himself
to the search for truth. A student of philosophies but slave of none, he now
watches nature “as it is” and in a perfect impersonality of mind solves her
mysteries one by one. Of him now can it be said with Sextus the Pythagorean
that “a great intellect is the chorus of divinity.” Thus dawns for him the
Vision of Intuition.
THE VISION OF THE EMOTIONS
I mentioned when describing the transition from the first stage to the second,
that there were in the world two main types of souls — those who pass from the
Vision of the Separated Self to the Vision of the Intuition by way of the mind,
and those others who develop along a parallel path and pass from the emotions
to the Intuition. We have just seen how souls are trained through the intellect
to cast out the self ; we shall now see how the same result is achieved for
those in whom emotions sway the mind.
As the intellectual type showed in the first stage a marked development of
intelligence of a low kind, so similarly shall we find that the souls whom we
are going to consider show during the same stage a great deal of feeling. Not
that this feeling will be refined or unselfish ; indeed it will be mostly be
lust and jealousy, with perhaps a little crude religious emotion thrown in. But
the character will be obviously easily swayed by emotions, and this trait in
the soul is now taken up, and worked upon to enable him to pass to the next
stage.
Following his emotional bent, and selfish and oblivious of the feelings of
those around him, the soul will compel others weaker than himself to be the
slaves of his desires. But the passion and the sense of possession which he has
of those who minister to his lusts will link him to them life after life, till
slowly he begins to feel that they are necessary to his emotional life, and not
dispensable at will. Gradually his impure passions will be transformed into
purer affections, and then he will be brought again and again into contact with
them, so that his emotions shall go out impulsively towards them. But the evil
which he wrought them in the past will now cast a veil over their eyes, and
make them indifferent to him. He will be forced to love on, to atone for past
evil by service, but despair will be his only reward. When in resentment he
tries to break the bond which ties him to them, he will find he cannot. He will
curse love, only to return again and again to love’s altar with his offerings.
Though life now becomes full of disappointment and despair, in his serener
moments he will acknowledge that, in spite of the suffering entailed, his
emotional life has slowly opened a new sense in him. He catches now and then
glimpses of an undying youth in all things, and the world that seems dreary and
aging will reappear under certain emotional stress as he knew it before life
became a tragedy. These glimpses are transitory at first, lasting indeed only
so long as the love emotion colors his being; but there is for him a time, —
`
When all the world is young, lad,
And all the trees are green,
And every goose a swan, lad,
And every lass a queen.
Life after life, fostered by his transitory
loves, this sense will grow in him till it blossoms into a sense of wonder. The
Nature reveals in all things in life new values, whose significance he can
henceforth never wholly forget. While love sways his being, each blade of grass
and leaf and flower has to him a new meaning ; he sees beauty now where he saw
none before. Everything beautiful around him — a face, a flower, a sunset, -
will link him in mysterious ways to those he loves; the world ceases to be a
blank page.
Love
wakes men once each lifetime each.
They lift their heavy lids and look;
And lo! What one sweet page can teach.
They read with joy, then close the book
And some give thanks, and some blaspheme.
And most forget. But either way,
That and the child's unheeded dream
Is all the light of all their day.
It will happen that this sense of wonder is intermittent and that there comes
periods when the world is veiled ; but the veil is of his own making, and must
be torn asunder if he is to possess the Vision of the Intuition. Once more
there enters into his life a dissatisfaction — a discontent that love itself is
transitory after all. Those whom he loves and who love him in return will be
taken from him just when life seems in flower ; friends he idealizes will
shatter the ideals so lovingly made for them. Cruel as it all seems, it is but
the reaping of sad sowings in past lives. But the reaping has a meaning, now as
always. He has so far been loving not Love but its shadow, not the Ideal from
which nothing can be taken away, but its counterfeit which suffers diminution.
He must now see clearer and see truer. The character must be studied, so that
it shall not rebound from enthusiasm to depression, nor be satisfied with a
vague mysticism, which prefers to revel in its own feelings rather than
evaluate what causes them.
Hence the inevitable purification through suffering; the dross of self is
burned away till there remains the gold of divine desire. He then discovers
that the truest feelings are only those which have in them the spirit of
offering. Now for him thus purified in desire, and for that other type of soul
made impersonal in intellect, there dawns the Vision of the Intuition.
THE VISION OF THE INTUITION
“Before the eyes can see, they must be incapable of tears. Before the
ear can hear, it must have lost its sensitiveness.” All souls who have come to
this stage have learned by now the bitter lesson that “it is only in
Renunciation that Life, properly speaking, can be said to begin.” But they have
also proved in their own experience that what once seemed death was but a
“repentance unto life.” They have now discovered the meaning of life — that man
is a child of God come forth to life to be a co-worker with his Father. It
matters not that a soul does not state to himself his relation to the whole in
these terms ; it only matters that he should have discovered that his part in
existence is to be a worker in a Work, and that nothing happening to himself
matters, so long as that Work proceeds to its inevitable end. He knows that the
end of thought and feeling is action for his fellow-men, and that this action
must be either dispassionate and without thought of reward, or full of a spirit
of grateful offering.
He possesses now the faculty of intuition, which transcending both reason and
emotion, yet can justify its judgments to either. He grows past “common sense,”
the criterion for common things, into an uncommon sense; for life is
full of uncommon things, of whose existence others are not aware. In men and
women, he discerns those invisible factors which are inevitable in human
relations, and hence his judgment of them is “not of this world.” In all
things, he see and feels One Life. Whatever unites attracts him ; if
intellectual, he will love to synthesize in science or philosophy; if
emotional, he will dedicate himself to art or philanthropy.
Now slowly for him Many become the One. The Unity will be known only in the
vision of the next stage ; but, preparing for it, science and art, religion and
philosophy, will deduce for him eternal fundamental types from the kaleidoscope
of life. Types of forms, types of thought, types of emotions, types of
temperament — these he sees everywhere round him, and life in all its phases
becomes transformed, because it reflects as in a mirror Archetypes of a realm
beyond time and space and mutability.
Everything
of mortal birth
-Is but a type;
What was of feeble worth
-Here becomes ripe.
What was a mystery
-Here meets the eyes;
The Ever-womanly
-Draws us on high.
“The
Ever-womanly” now shows him everywhere one Wisdom. Science tells him of the
oneness of Nature, and philosophy that man is a consciousness creating his
world; art reveals in all things youth and beauty, and religion whispers to his
heart that Love broods over all. His sympathies go to all, as his will is ever
at their service.
Not far now is the time when for him shall dawn the Vision of the Spirit. But
to bring him to its portal, a dissatisfaction once more enters his soul. No
longer can that dissatisfaction be personal ; the sad reaping of sorrow for
evil done is over, and “only the sorrow of others casts its shadow over me.”
Nor is it caused by any sense of the mutability of things, for, absolutely,
without question, he knows his immortality, and that, though all things change,
there is behind them THAT which changes never. Yet he climbs to his appointed
goal, dissatisfaction must always be.
It
comes to him now, as a creator. For with intuition to guide him, he creates in
that field of endeavor in which he has trained himself in past lives. As poet,
artist, statesman, saint, or scientist, he is one of the world’s geniuses. But
though his creations are a miracle to all, yet to him they are only partly true
and only partly beautiful, for he sees the ideal which he would fain bring down
to men, and knows his failure as none others can know. Life is teaching him “to
attain by shadowing forth the unattainable.”
And thus he grows life after life, scientist, poet, artist and saint now merge
into a new type of being who sees with “larger, other eyes than ours.” He has
regained his integrity of heart and his innocency of hands, and is become “a
little child”; “by pity enlightened”. He is now Parsifal, the “Pure Fool,” who
enters upon his heritage.
Then it is that at its threshold there meets him One who has watched him
climbing for many a life, and all unseen has encouraged him. This is the Master,
one of that “goodliest fellowship of famous knights whereof the world holds
record”. In Him the soul sees in realization all those ideals which have drawn
him onward and upward. Hand in hand with this “Faith in God,” he now treads
"the Way” while the Vision of the Spirit is shown him by his Master. Who
shall describe that Vision but those who have it, and how may one less than a
Master here speak with authority? And yet since Masters of the Wisdom have
moved among men, since Buddha, Krishna and Christ have shown us, in Their lives
something of what that vision is, surely from Their lives we can deduce what
the vision must be.
In that Vision of the Spirit, the Many is One. “Alone within this
universe he comes and goes; it is He who is the fire, the water He pervadeth ;
Him and Him only knowing, one crosseth over death; no other path at all is
there to go.”
Now for the soul who has come to the end of his climbing, each man is only “the
spirit he worked in, not what he did but what he became”. There is no high nor
low in life, for in all he sees a ray from the Divine Flame. As through the
highest so through the lowest too, to him “God stooping shows sufficient of His
light for us in the dark to rise by.” Life is henceforth become a Sacrament,
and he is its celebrant ; with loving thoughts and deeds, he celebrates and
at-ones man with God and God with man. He discerns, purifies in himself, and
offers to God “infinite passion and the pain of finite hearts that yearn”. From
God on high, he brings to men what alone can satisfy that yearning.
He has renounced “the will to live,” and thereby has made its purpose his own;
“Foregoing self, the universe grows I.” Yet he knows with rapture that, that—
“I“ is but a tiny lens in a great Light. Henceforth he lives only in order that
a Greater than he may live through him, love through him, act through him.
Evermore shall his heart whisper, in heaven or in hell, whithersoever his work
may take him ; “him know I, the Mighty Man, resplendent like the Sun, beyond
the Darkness; Him and Him only knowing one crosseth over death ; no other path
at all is there to go.”
Thus
do we, happy few, the precursors of a new age, see life in the light of
reincarnation. As the evolutionist sees all nature linked in one ladder of life,
and sky and sea testify to him of evolution, so do we all men linked in one
common purpose, and their hopes and fears, their self-sacrifice and their
selfishness, testify to us of reincarnation. Life and its experiences have
ceased to be for us—
An
arch wherethro’
Gleams that untravell’d world, whose margin fades
For ever and ever when I move.
No
longer can the world be for us as the poet sang :
Act
first this Earth, a stage so gloom’d with woe,
You all but sicken at the shifting scenes.
And yet be patient. Our Playwright may show
In some fifth Act what this wild Drama means.
The
Fifth Act is here before your eyes. It is that Vision of the Spirit which is
the heritage of every soul, and thither all men are slowly treading, for “no
other path at all is there to go.”
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Theosophy Study Group you can use
this as an
introductory handout
Lentil burgers, a
thousand press ups before breakfast and
the daily 25 mile
run may put it off for a while but death
seems to get most
of us in the end. We are pleased to
present for your
consideration, a definitive work on the
subject by a
Student of Katherine Tingley entitled
Theosophy and the Number Seven
A selection of articles
relating to the esoteric
significance of the Number
7 in Theosophy
The Spiritual Home of Urban Theosophy
The Earth Base for Evolutionary Theosophy
What Theosophy Is From the Absolute to Man
The Formation of a Solar System The Evolution of Life
The Constitution of Man After Death Reincarnation
The Purpose of Life The Planetary Chains
The Result of Theosophical Study
An Outstanding
Introduction to Theosophy
By a student of
Katherine Tingley
Elementary Theosophy Who is the Man? Body and Soul
Body, Soul and Spirit Reincarnation Karma
Try these if you are looking
for a
local Theosophy Group or Centre
UK Listing of Theosophical Groups
Worldwide Directory of Theosophical Links
General pages
about Wales, Welsh History
and The History
of Theosophy in Wales
Wales is a
Principality within the United Kingdom
and has an eastern
border with England.
The land area is
just over 8,000 square miles.
Snowdon in North
Wales is the highest mountain at 3,650 feet.
The coastline is
almost 750 miles long.
The population of Wales as at the 2001 census is 2,946,200.